Samsung’s foldable smartphone, rumoured to be called Galaxy X, has been certified in the company’s home market, South Korea.
According to LetsGoDigital , the smartphone has appeared in a filing from the Korean National Radio Research Agency (NRRA), sporting a model number SM-G888N0. This proves that the device has received the necessary approval and is gearing to be launched soon in the market. In the filing, the device is listed as a “radio equipment for global LTE communication,” while it was spotted as a “smartphone” at the Wi-Fi Alliance. However, the filing does not reveal any other information about the smartphone.
Image: LetsGoDigital
For months, specialist Samsung news websites have been talking about patents reportedly filed by the manufacturer with the Korean Intellectual Property Office (KIPO), hinting at a possible design for the firm's future folding smartphone. Such a device has supposedly been in the pipeline at Samsung for years, ever since the firm showed off its first flexible plastic ...

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Sunday that he kept politics away and only reflected the aspirations of the people in his ‘Mann Ki Baat’ aired on radio every month. As the broadcast completed three years, the Prime Minister said he never let political heat and anger influence his thoughts while addressing the people in his broadcast launched on October 2, 2014.
Speaking of diversity, he said the element of unity is India’s speciality. “We are proud of our diversity, but have you ever tried to feel this diversity?” he asked.
“I would like to reiterate to my countrymen, and specially to my young friends, that we are alive and aware beings. We should feel India’s diversity, touch it, feel it. You may see for yourself that for your inner development, the diversities of our country work as a significant teaching tool.”
The Opposition has slammed the government on issues like cow vigilantism, and imposing majority view was killing the diverse nature of the country.
Ahead of Mahatma Gandhi’s birth ...

The Congress said on Sunday that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's monthly radio programme 'Mann Ki Baat' was a "one-sided" communication in which he did not speak on important issues such as the police action on BHU students, unemployment and high fuel prices.
The Congress's criticism came hours after Modi, in the 36th episode of his monthly address, said he has used the programme to reflect the views and aspirations of the people rather than expressing his own opinions.
"Over the last three years, we have continuously seen that 'Mann Ki Baat' is (a) one-sided communication exercise of the prime minister...He only does one-sided communication," Congress spokesperson Ajoy Kumar told reporters here.
Kumar alleged that the prime minister did not speak on issues such as police action on students in the Banaras Hindu University (BHU) campus last night, unemployment, high fuel prices, the "deteriorating situation" in Kashmir and border areas and incidents of sexual abuse of children.
Terming the police action on ...

18-year-old Bilal Dar from Jammu & Kashmir's Bandipora, whose cleanliness drive was acknowledged by PM Narendra Modi during his Mann Ki Baat speech, thanked the prime minister.
Prime Minister Modi on Sunday addressed the nation in his 36th edition of monthly radio programme 'Mann Ki Baat'. In the 30-minute long address, PM Modi appreciated the 18-year-old Dar, for actively taking up the cleanliness drive.
Congratulate 18-yr-old Bilal Dar,who has been made brand ambassador for cleanliness by Srinagar municipal corporation: PM Modi #MannkiBaat pic.twitter.com/4XTGgqQxuX
— ANI (@ANI) September 24, 2017
Dar, who has cleaned more than 12,000 kg of garbage from the Dal Lake in a year has been made brand ambassador for cleanliness by Srinagar municipal corporation.
"Grateful Modiji mentioned me. It is my request to him to please do something for my employment;there is no one else earning in family," Dar said while speaking to ANI.
18yr-old Bilal Dar of J&K's Bandipora acknowledged by PM Modi in #MannKiBaat for ...

The prime minister said he had kept this three-year-old programme away from politics and had tried to connect with the people without getting swayed by the (political) "heat" and "anger" that may prevail at any particular time.

In the 36th episode of the radio broadcast, Modi expressed confidence that social scientists, universities, research scholars and media experts would conduct analysis of the programme and highlight its positives and negatives.

As Mann ki Baat completes three years today, Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke on how the monthly radio programme has become a platform to showcase India's strenghts. He is also expected to speak on the Sardar Sarovar Dam and the high-speed rail project, which was recently inaugurated. Here are the highlights of his address: